Table 2.
Site | Bacterial genus | Samples with prevalence > 1% | Distribution of the prevalencea (%) | Most prevalent species | Dominant species (> 90%) |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Endometrial cavity | Lactobacillus | 44 (83%) | 13 [3—37] | 16 (30%) | 4 (8%) |
Propionibacterium | 42 (79%) | 7 [4–14] | 2 (4%) | 0 (0%) | |
Pelomonas | 39 (74%) | 6 [2–9] | 4 (8%) | 0 (0%) | |
Pseudomonas | 32 (60%) | 8 [2–14] | 3 (6%) | 0 (0%) | |
Streptococcus | 30 (57%) | 2 [1–3] | 1 (2%) | 0 (0%) | |
Escherichia shigella | 27 (51%) | 4 [1–11] | 4 (8%) | 2 (4%) | |
Vagina | Lactobacillus | 48 (91%) | 83 [27—99] | 29 (55%) | 22 (42%) |
Gardnerella | 17 (32%) | 31 [15—62] | 8 (15%) | 1 (2%) | |
Bifidobacterium | 14 (26%) | 50 [8—87] | 7 (13%) | 4 (8%) |
For the most common bacteria, the table illustrates the frequency of specimen clearly demonstrating its presence (prevalence > 1%), their Median [interquartile range] distribution, when they are the prevalent species (“Most prevalent species”) and the frequency of specimen showing a strong dominance of that species (“Dominant species”, i.e., when the species represented > 90% of the detected bacteria). Data is reported as number (%) or Median [interquartile range], as appropriate.
aThis data refers exclusively to samples showing a prevalence of the genera above 1%.